Combining capital growth and yield is quite standard across the industry for measuring total return. Yes the dividend is reflected in the share price (it doesn't grow as much as it might have if reinvested) but that's completely fine. Combine them to get the total return. Pretty normal.
With acknowledgement to the palette hack discussed in the other comments, I still think there's a ton of value in this.
So often, people observe patterns in nature that appear to be so unlikely as to be by design. I have family members that are superstitious: if a light flickers at the same time that they mention a recently deceased loved one, it must be "a sign". Similarly, they will point to some overwhelmingly unlikely occurrence in the news, and ask, "how do you explain that?" The answer is usually random chance (if not deceit). And this exercise is a good illustration of that.
"Waldo, in the digits of pi?!? What are the odds??" - To the outsider who is not scientifically minded, this just looks so coincidental as to be magic. But almost any pattern can be found in randomness. It's just that the size of the necessary search space explodes as the query becomes larger / more specific.
The average HN reader knows all this, but the Waldo story is still a cool way to describe it to other people.
What the actual f. I feel like the only commenter here who wasn't aware of this. Thankfully I don't use landlines, but still, that is beyond crazy to me.
It seems close to pointless, but a dedicated window per
PWA pinned to your taskbar/start menu is handy. It also doesn't get clustered together with other browser windows which I like. And the icon is visually different. If you don't want the feature then you just don't install the "app" (strong word for it). I like it for a couple of things (JIRA, email) but not others (social media). I wish they hadn't removed the feature and I'm probably going to switch browsers because of it although I'm loathe to do so.
> Loved the ebook, and now want to buy 20 paper copies for your friends? Just $4 each, so $80 total for 20 hardcover books.
Lost me here. Each of those friends would be expected to pay for the content also, in the same way you cannot legally buy 1 MP3 and share with 50 people.